Editing this website

Prerequisites

Jekyll.

This website is written using a static website generator called Jekyll. To work with editing this website you will need to install it.
In short, Jekyll uses a combination of templated HTML files and Markdown to compile the final site.
Generally, the content itself lies within the Markdown files, and the HTML is for layout.
A full tutorial about how to use Jekyll is out of the scope of this document, but, for our purposes, only Markdown will be edited.

Checking out the website sources

You will notice lots of Markdown files and HTML templates in the repository root. The compiled content of the website itself is served from the content/ folder in this repository. That is to say, that the actual content of the website itself, as well as its sources are stored in the same repository. Additionally, the main branch on this repository is asf-site and not master

Gerrit is used to submit code reviews for the website just as it is with the main codebase. The main difference the site is not strictly subject to code reviews.

Then, you likely will want to check out to make your own topic branch as to not work directly on the “live” branch, like so:

Editing and viewing the change.

For whichever section of the site you want to edit, go ahead and do so with the text editor of your choice. Then, to see what your change looks like, in the repository root, execute:

➤ jekyll serve --watch

This sets up a small integrated web server and compiles the site dynamically as it is edited. Once you are satisfied with how the site looks, go ahead and commit your changes with git.

Once you have made your commit, push it to Gerrit for review:

➤ git gerrit submit -b asf-site

For longer edits you might need to update your local asf-site mirror, and then merge that onto your working branch. This will prevent your branch from falling too far out of date, and ensure that your code review proposals will merge successfully with master. Similar to the way this is done for code changes you can use

➤ git gerrit update -b asf-site

to do this.

Submitting the change to the live site

When the submitted review is committed in Gerrit, pull it and overwrite your current asf-site branch:

➤ git fetch gerrit

Then, push the exact commit from the Gerrit web interface to the ASF git repository. Do this with care! ASF git doesn’t allow hard resets on branches, so whatever you push here is final.